Dokument #1058557
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
According to a 3 November 1997 dispatch
from Agence France Presse (AFP), the Iranian newspapers reported
that the Iranian parliament had passed a new law against child
abuse on 2 November 1997. The law would deny custody to parents who
endanger their children. Among the examples given of such
endangerment are applying too much corporal punishment or forcing a
child "to engage in immoral professions such as prostitution,
begging or smuggling." AFP reported that the new legislation
followed increased reporting of child abuse in Iran in recent
months, including a notorious case in which an eight-year-old girl
was reportedly murdered by her parents "after being tortured for
years." The dispatch added that the new law could make it easier
for divorced women to challenge former husbands for custody of
their children. Please see the attached text of the dispatch for
more details.
The following is an excerpt from a 1 June
1995 interview in The Independent with Dr. Saeed Rajaie
Khorasani, the Chairman of the Human Rights Committee of Iran's
parliament. Dr. Khorasani is speaking of sexual abuse within the
family in Iran:
"When this kind of thing happens here, people don't take it indifferently. They attack and kill the father on the spot. The brother who sexually attacks his sister ( the biggest crime that can happen. In such cases, the conduct of the law in this country does not necessarily correspond with the law in Europe or America."
On 8 July 1997 the Associated Press (AP)
quoting the English-language newspaper Iran Daily,
reported that a soldier had been arrested for kidnapping and raping
a six-year-old boy in Ilam province. The dispatch stated that the
soldier could be sentenced to death if convicted of
"pedophilia."
According to a 9 June 1997 Reuters
dispatch, the police in Tehran had arrested ten people in
connection with "three pedophile rings." The suspects were accused
of sexually abusing children who had run away from home, "then
using them for criminal activities." Among those arrested were "two
notorious criminals known as Davoud Shale (Davoud With a Limp) and
Said Eskelet (Said the Skeleton)." The dispatch stated that cases
of sexual abuse of children are rarely reported in the Iranian
press.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum.
References
Agence France Presse (AFP). 3 November
1997. "Iranian Parliament Passes Law Against Child Abuse."
(NEXIS)
Associated Press (AP). 8 July 1997.
"Soldier Arrested for Raping Boy." (NEXIS)
The Independent. 1 June 1995.
Robert Fisk. "Defending the Rights of Islam; Yes, Tehran has a
human rights watchdog. And no, he has no difficulty turning aside
awkward questions by attacking the double standards of the West."
(NEXIS)
Reuters. 9 June 1997. BC Cycle. "Iran
Police Break Up Three Child Sex Abuse Rings." (NEXIS)
Attachment
Agence France Presse (AFP). 3 November
1997. "Iranian Parliament Passes Law Against Child Abuse."
(NEXIS)